12,811 research outputs found
Theoretical Determination of the Boundary of the Geomagnetic Field in a Steady Solar Wind
Theoretical determination of the boundary of the geomagnetic field in a steady solar win
XMM-Newton First Observation in the Pleiades
We present the first results from a 40 ks Guaranteed Time XMM-Newton pointing
in the Pleiades. We detect almost all early-mid dM members in the field and
several very low mass (VLM) stars - including the brown dwarf (BD) candidate
Roque 9 - and investigate the variation of X-ray activity levels, hardness
ratios and flare frequency with spectral type down to the BD regime.Comment: 5 pages, 6 figures, to be published in proceedings of `Stellar
Coronae in the Chandra and XMM-Newton Era
The nodal structure of doubly-excited resonant states of helium
The authors examine the nodal structure of accurate helium wavefunctions calculated by direct diagonalization of the full six-dimensional problem. It is shown that for fixed interelectronic distance R (or hyperspherical radius R) the symmetric doubly-excited resonant states have well defined lambda , mu nodal structure indicating a near separability in prolate spheroidal coordinates. For fixed lambda , however, a clear mixing of R, mu nodes is demonstrated. This corresponds to a breakdown of the adiabatic approximation and can be understood in terms of the classical two-electron motion
Moderate temperature detector development
P-side backside reflecting constant, photodiode characterization, and photodiode diffusion and G-R currents were investigated in an effort to develop an 8 m to 12 m infrared quantum detector using mercury cadmium telluride. Anodization, phosphorus implantation, and the graded band gap concept were approaches considered for backside formation. Variable thickness diodes were fabricated with a back surface anodic oxide to investigate the effect of this surface preparation on the diffusion limited zero bias impedance. A modeling technique was refined to thoroughly model diode characteristics. Values for the surface recombination velocity in the depletion region were obtained. These values were improved by implementing better surface damage removal techniques
An XMM-Newton observation of the young open cluster NGC 2547: coronal activity at 30 Myr
We report XMM-Newton observations of the young open cluster NGC 2547 which
allow us to characterise coronal activity in solar-type stars at an age of 30
Myr. X-ray emission peaks among G-stars at luminosities (0.3-3keV) of
Lx~10^{30.5} erg/s and declines to Lx<=10^{29.0} erg/s among M-stars. Coronal
spectra show evidence for multi-temperature differential emission measures and
low coronal metal abundances (Z~0.3). The G- and K-type stars follow the same
relationship between X-ray activity and Rossby number established in older
clusters and field stars, although most solar-type stars in NGC 2547 exhibit
saturated/super-saturated X-ray activity levels. Median levels of Lx and
Lx/Lbol in the solar-type stars of NGC 2547 are similar to T-Tauri stars of the
Orion Nebula cluster (ONC), but an order of magnitude higher than in the older
Pleiades. The spread in X-ray activity levels among solar-type stars in NGC
2547 is much smaller than in older or younger clusters. Coronal temperatures
increase with Lx, Lx/Lbol and surface X-ray flux. Active solar-type stars in
NGC 2547 have coronal temperatures between those in the ONC and the most active
older ZAMS stars. A flaring rate (for total flare energies [0.3-3keV] >10^{34}
erg) of 1 every 350^{+350}_{-120} ks was found for solar-type stars, similar to
rates found in the ONC and Pleiades. Comparison with ROSAT HRI data taken 7
years previously reveals that only 10-15 percent of solar-type stars or stars
with Lx>3x10^{29} erg/s exhibit X-ray variability by more than a factor of two.
The similar levels of X-ray activity and rate of occurrence for large flares in
NGC 2547 and the ONC demonstrate that the X-ray radiation environment around
young solar-type stars remains relatively constant over their first 30 Myr
(abridged).Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS. Electronic tables available from
the autho
Lifetime cost effectiveness of simvastatin in a range of risk groups and age groups derived from a randomised trial of 20,536 people
<i>Objectives</i>: To evaluate the cost effectiveness of 40 mg simvastatin daily continued for life in people of different ages with differing risks of vascular disease.
Design A model developed from a randomised trial was used to estimate lifetime risks of vascular events and costs of treatment and hospital admissions in the United Kingdom.
<i>Setting</i>: 69 hospitals in the UK.
<i>Participants</i>: 20 536 men and women (aged 40-80) with coronary disease, other occlusive arterial disease, or diabetes.
<i>Interventions</i>: 40 mg simvastatin daily versus placebo for an average of 5 years.
<i>Main</i> <i>outcome</i> <i>measures</i>: Cost effectiveness of 40 mg simvastatin daily expressed as additional cost per life year gained. Major vascular event defined as non-fatal myocardial infarction or death from coronary disease, any stroke, or revascularisation procedure. Results were extrapolated to younger and older age groups at lower risk of vascular disease than were studied directly, as well as to lifetime treatment.
<i>Results</i>: At the April 2005 UK price of £4.87 (€7; $9) per 28 day pack of generic 40 mg simvastatin, lifetime treatment was cost saving in most age groups and vascular disease risk groups studied directly. Gains in life expectancy and cost savings decreased with increasing age and with decreasing risk of vascular disease. People aged 40-49 with 5 year risks of major vascular events of 42% and 12% at start of treatment gained 2.49 and 1.67 life years, respectively. Treatment with statins remained cost saving or cost less than £2500 per life year gained in people as young as 35 years or as old as 85 with 5 year risks of a major vascular event as low as 5% at the start of treatment.
<i>Conclusions</i>: Treatment with statins is cost effective in a wider population than is routinely treated at present
Pattern Formation by Boundary Forcing in Convectively Unstable, Oscillatory Media With and Without Differential Transport
Motivated by recent experiments and models of biological segmentation, we
analyze the exicitation of pattern-forming instabilities of convectively
unstable reaction-diffusion-advection (RDA) systems, occuring by means of
constant or periodic forcing at the upstream boundary. Such boundary-controlled
pattern selection is a generalization of the flow-distributed oscillation (FDO)
mechanism that can include Turing or differential flow instability (DIFI)
modes. Our goal is to clarify the relationships among these mechanisms in the
general case where there is differential flow as well as differential
diffusion. We do so by analyzing the dispersion relation for linear
perturbations and showing how its solutions are affected by differential
transport. We find a close relationship between DIFI and FDO, while the Turing
mechanism gives rise to a distinct set of unstable modes. Finally, we
illustrate the relevance of the dispersion relations using nonlinear
simulations and we discuss the experimental implications of our results.Comment: Revised version with added content (new section and figures added),
changes to wording and organizatio
The Statistics of the BATSE Spectral Features
The absence of a BATSE line detection in a gamma-ray burst spectrum during
the mission's first six years has led to a statistical analysis of the
occurrence of lines in the BATSE burst database; this statistical analysis will
still be relevant if lines are detected. We review our methodology, and present
new simulations of line detectability as a function of the line parameters. We
also discuss the calculation of the number of ``trials'' in the BATSE database,
which is necessary for our line detection criteria.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, AIPPROC LaTeX, to appear in "Gamma-Ray Bursts,
4th Huntsville Symposium," eds. C. Meegan, R. Preece and T. Koshu
- …